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Pine Island, New York

Hamlets in New York (state)Hamlets in Orange County, New YorkPoughkeepsie–Newburgh–Middletown metropolitan areaUse mdy dates from July 2023Warwick, New York
Pine Island, NY (2), Nov. 2022
Pine Island, NY (2), Nov. 2022

Pine Island is a hamlet in the town of Warwick in Orange County, New York, United States. It is the largest community in the Black Dirt Region, which is famous for its "black dirt onions." It gets its name from its slight elevation over the surrounding land. In the days before the nearby Wallkill River was rerouted to control flooding, it would often be an actual island for a period in the spring.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Pine Island, New York (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Pine Island, New York
Pulaski Highway,

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
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Wikipedia: Pine Island, New YorkContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 41.298 ° E -74.46 °
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Address

Pulaski Highway 31
10969
New York, United States
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Pine Island, NY (2), Nov. 2022
Pine Island, NY (2), Nov. 2022
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Nearby Places

Dunning House
Dunning House

The Dunning House is located on Ridgebury Road in the Town of Wawayanda, New York, United States. It is a wooden house first built in the mid-18th century and extensively renovated several times in the 19th. As a result, it embodies a number of different architectural styles. A modest two-room clapboard house first built around 1750, a then-common design with a few extant examples in the region, it was later expanded in the early 19th century in a Federal style center-hall plan. The hallway still features a segmented Federal archway with its keystone supported by a pair of reeded pilasters. The hand-hewn beams, doors, trim and wall finishes are also original to that period and style.Later renovations added interior rooms with Greek Revival features such as architraves, moldings, cornices and medallions. In the Victorian era, a Stick style porch with chamfered posts and an intricate cornice molding was built on the front and an oriel window on the southwest side. Late in the 19th century, a central front gable was added with an arch top window.The renovations and additions over the course of the 19th century have produced a modern house of two and a half stories with five bays. It is located on a 1.1-acre (4,400 m2) parcel, overlooking the Slate Hill area, with one other building, a modern greenhouse not considered a contributing property. In 2001, it was added to the National Register of Historic Places due to its relatively intact preservation of its stylistically different architectural features. It is currently up for sale, with an asking price of $800,000.